Neil Neches of the New York City Transit's marketing and service information department gained fame when he inserted a semicolon in a public service placard:
It was nearly hidden on a New York City Transit public service placard exhorting subway riders not to leave their newspaper behind when they get off the train.
“Please put it in a trash can,” riders are reminded. After which Neil Neches, an erudite writer in the transit agency’s marketing and service information department, inserted a semicolon. The rest of the sentence reads, “that’s good news for everyone.”
Which brings the question: why aren't we using semicolons more often? (I blame conjunctions!)
Ironically, The New York Times article itself contained a punctuation error (see errata below). Oh, the irony!
Link - via Nag on the Lake | Oh, and here's a guide on how to use semicolons without committing a grammatical sin.
Comments (13)
1) People feel less comfortable with the semicolon and therefore use it less. This results in it leaving "Standard English" bit by bit, much like "whom."
2) People replace the semicolon and use the dash - like this - to express themselves, which is more visible and appears to have become the Swiss Army knife of punctuation marks.
3) Writing for the web demands that we use more simple sentence constructions that will be more easily read. This in and of itself means that we see less and less of the semicolon, which leads to an exacerbation of point 1)...
I love those damn thing.
You will love this awesome animated grammar gif:
http://i86.photobucket.com/albums/k83/JennyCrackCorn/greatest-animated-gif.gif
I haven't figured out the part about not using your PIN at an ATM and something about the HIV virus, though. :(
And I am a staunch user of the semicolon; it's very useful when breaking up a sentence into two isolated thoughts. My problem is deciding whether to use a colon or a dash.
I love colon.
In some situations I feel like I'm showing off if I use the semicolon, so I like to throw in a few split infinitives or dangling participles to balance it out.
They can be used as super-commas when you want to be unambiguous about commas contained within the items being listed. This is the list; this, that and the other thing; he, she and the dog; homer, marge and the kids.
It's "grammar," not "grammer." Gaudere's Law strikes!
(If you meant that using a semicolon in place of a comma is not appropriate to the guy who played Frasier Crane, then I retract this comment. Except to point out that Mr. Grammer's name is usually capitalized.)